— Hugh Mackay (via internal-acceptance-movement)
Rings true.
(Source: beautemillesimee, via greenlikebathwater)
— Hugh Mackay (via internal-acceptance-movement)
Rings true.
(Source: beautemillesimee, via greenlikebathwater)
A Canadian Peacekeeper was quoted in this encounter with a modern-day Gurkha soldier.
“We fought alongside the Gurkha for a while. They are all very neat, clean shaven, and extremely polite. I was fascinated by their Kukri, and when I asked one of them if I could examine one, he very courteously unsheathed it and handed it to me. After I looked at it for a few minutes, I handed it back to him. Before he holstered the weapon, he very calmly flitted his thumb with the blade, causing a small cut. I was surprised by this, and when I asked him why he did that, he explained to me that it was tradition that the blade was not to be taken out of its sheath unless it was to draw blood.”